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Neuropeptide Abnormalities in Patients With Early Alzheimer Disease
Kenneth L. Davis, MD;
Richard C. Mohs, PhD;
Deborah B. Marin, MD;
Dushyant P. Purohit, MD;
Daniel P. Perl, MD;
Melinda Lantz, MD;
Gregory Austin;
Vahram Haroutunian, PhD
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1999;56:981-987.
Background Deficits in somatostatin-like immunoreactivity (SLI) and corticotropin-releasing factor immunoreactivity (CRF-IR) are well recognized as prominent neurochemical deficits in Alzheimer disease (AD). The question of whether these profound neuropeptidergic deficits found in patients with end-stage disease extend into those with much earlier disease is relatively unanswered. To determine the relation between level of SLI and CRF-IR in different cerebrocortical regions to the earliest signs of cognitive deterioration in AD.
Methods We examined SLI and CRF-IR levels in 9 neocortical brain regions of 66 elderly patients in a postmortem study of nursing home residents who had either no significant neuropathologic lesions or lesions associated only with AD. Patients were assessed by the Clinical Dementia Rating scale (CDR) to have no dementia or questionable, mild, or moderate dementia, and were compared with 15 patients with severe dementia.
Results Both CRF-IR and SLI were significantly reduced in the cortices of patients with the most severe dementia, but only the levels of CRF-IR were reduced in those with mild (CDR=1.0) and moderate dementia (CDR=2.0). Levels of CRF-IR and SLI correlated significantly with CDR, but this correlation was more robust for CRF-IR and persisted even when severely cognitively impaired patients were eliminated from analysis.
Conclusions Although SLI and CRF-IR levels are significantly reduced in patients with severe dementia, only CRF-IR is reduced significantly in the cortices of those with mild dementia. Thus, CRF-IR can serve as a potential neurochemical marker of early dementia and possibly early AD.
From the Departments of Psychiatry (Drs Davis, Mohs, Marin, and Haroutunian and Mr Austin) and Pathology (Drs Purohit and Perl), Mount Sinai School of Medicine, and Jewish Home and Hospital (Dr Lantz), New York, NY.
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The Preeminent Role of Neuropeptide Systems in the Early Pathophysiology of Alzheimer Disease: Up With Corticotropin-Releasing Factor, Down With Acetylcholine
Charles B. Nemeroff
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 1999;56(11):991-992.
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